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Uneven Regional Development in Interwar Britain
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 March 2009
Extract
This study examines Great Britain's adaptation in the 1920s and 1930s to the decline in the market for its nineteenth-century exports: cotton textiles, ships, iron and steel products, and coal. Continued growth in a mature economy depends at certain points upon structural change, in this case a movement from declining to expanding industries. At such times, I contend, the developing sector tends to grow independently, rather than through transformation of existing productive structures. Growth does not occur primarily through a reallocation of capital and labor from declining to expanding industries and regions.
- Type
- Summaries of Doctoral Dissertations
- Information
- Copyright
- Copyright © The Economic History Association 1983
References
1 This dissertation was completed at Yale University under the direction of William N. Parker and David P. Levine.
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